If I climbed a high mountain, and found that Jamie Lee Curtis was the wise guru on top of that mountain, I would not be surprised.
If I climbed a high mountain, and found that Jamie Lee Curtis was the wise guru on top of that mountain, I would not be surprised.
I am so sorry for what this ending could have been instead of ..this.
I pretty entirely think people are missing the thing the show is trying to say, especially in the context of the last episode. Gonna try and explain my perspective.
Where have you been for the 5 or 6 years that streaming television has been covered
B- may be a bit too generous. I was really bummed out with the way this episode was executed, finishing what i thought was a really entertaining show by spelling out everything for the viewer over and over again in a way that went beyond earnest and into a sort of sugary glop that was imo completely out of place. That…
In episode 5 I began getting this as a vague feeling, but by episode 7 (and the ending episodes) I am fully convinced this is unintentionally an AMAZING lowkey Dark Tower series. The Red Room. The crimson dresses. The weird way the past, present, and future all exist in the house at the same time. It’s a trap built…
AV Club does that constantly (glowing pre-air review; episode reviews that shit all over it while fixating on one specific and largely inconsequential point) and it drives me BONKERS. The worst recent-ish example was Mindhunter, in which the episode reviewer spent half of every recap griping bitterly about the music…
As a former addict who literally was in this *exact same situation* if you change the genders (I broke away from from my rehab, cuz I was worried and had to find a friend, and I stupidly thought I would look after him and he gave me a kiss saying he’d be right back... and wasn’t) this episode really hit home.
Amazin…
Just started watching, I’m pretty pleased so far actually.
Are all of these reviews going to be devoted to bitching about the adaptation or lack thereof? Haven’t we s known for a while that the story was a lot different from the book and that they just basically adopted the setting?
Molly has a glass jaw. She hit Andrew with that jab about kissing his boy’s girl (or ex, I can’t remember), but couldn’t take it when he teased her about Dro. How was he supposed to know that she would get triggered? Which she wouldn’t be if she just took her narrow behind back to the therapist and talked about it!!!
I agree with all of your points. The internal conversations and her concern over losing her teeth had me CRYING!! LOL!!
I loved the internal Issa monologue so much, I wish they would keep that up. When she would answer people in her head first I was dying. This episode also kind of broke my heart. I wish the season would last a little longer.
Is it possible that Nathan was just buttering up Issa until the Lyft investigation was over? Does that seem too out of the realm of possibility??
- For some reason, GQ thought it would be a good idea to put the Men of Insecure in swimming trunks:
The show’s fandom has always been divided in our opinions of Lawrence. For that reason I get why they brought him back; but as a woman who has dated a man like Lawrence I couldn’t be less happy to see him. It was an amazing episode like always, I laughed, shook my head and screamed. I LOVE Nathan, when he started…
Godzilla. Do not try and figure out Godzilla continuity, for that way lies madness.
Shirley Jackson's my favorite author, so seeing her work adapted poorly makes my very upset. I think Wise's version is one of the scariest movies ever- you really don't see anything, the sound design really sells the horror.
Robert Wise's The Haunting is one of the greatest horror films of all time.
Jan de Bont's The Haunting is one of the worst.
"Honestly, could SOMEONE just hug Eric?"